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Small - $64.00 USD Medium - $64.00 USD Large - $64.00 USD XLarge - Sold Out XXLarge - $64.00 USD Your new favorite sweater 2 color way hoodie and ultra comfy with classic Zomby print on back 50% Polyester / 50% Cotton Fleece Fabric weight 8.2 oz/yd² Earth Sun Moon Trading Company Inc 19 years in business 111 N Center St Grove City, PA 16127-1641 Mr. Stephen Tessier, C.F.O. Mr. Nathan A Depew, President Principal: Mr. Stephen Tessier, C.F.O. This company sells nature oriented apparel and university themed apparel that can be personalized with family name. BBB Reason for Ratings BBB rating is based on 13 factors: Get the details about the factors considered. BBB Rating System Overview Earth Sun Moon Trading Company Inc has received 0.00 out of 5 stars based on 0 Customer Reviews and a BBB Rating of A+. It started quite innocently in the basement of a local record shop in 1996, but over the years Earth Sun Moon Trading Co. has grown into what you might call a successful company.
(Which means there are lots of good folks working here and that I actually get a steady paycheck and a decent car to drive.) Our nature-inspired designs are known for a quirky sense of humor and top-notch artwork, but many people don't know that Earth Sun Moon has become much more than a T-shirt company. It has become a place where each customer and employee is valued and respected, a place that gives back to the community, and a place that puts people above profits. Maybe you've heard that you can't make money if you're concerned about treating people right. I have to tell you—it's not true! I've discovered that the ordinary, small-town Americans of Grove City, PA are capable of brilliant creativity, staggering productivity and an almost embarrassing loyalty. Giving them the chance to prove it is one of the best reasons I go to work every day. I've also discovered that people who feel valued are more likely to value others in turn. That's why you can expect to get the best customer service of your life from the great people here at Earth Sun Moon.
There is a reason we're an A+ rated member of the Better Business Bureau. It's not our policies (although being organized helps). It's because we care! Our four-fold mission is: To be good to our customers. You make our company possible—after all, you pay our paychecks—and we don't intend to forget it. If for any reason you are not satisfied with our company, we won't rest until we make things right. As you would expect from a people-oriented business like ours, we take the privacy of our customers seriously. To be good to each other. Our company culture is based on the ideal of mutual respect for our fellow employees, our business associates and our community. We feel that our efforts to be fair, honest and kind to the people we work with every day are of the greatest value. To be good at what we do. All of our design work, printing and embroidery are done in our own facility in Grove City, Pennsylvania. We take pride in our work and go to great lengths to make sure that every garment we produce is top-quality.
To be good to the earth. It's the only one we've got! We take every opportunity to recycle and implement practices to reduce our consumption of natural resources. We also buy the majority of our blank apparel from Gildan, a company that has made a profound commitment to environmentally sustainable business practice and fair trade.lsu hoodies 3xl Gildan does its manufacturing overseas—in Honduras and Mexico, mostly. sandee hoodiesCompanies who send jobs overseas are not known for valuing either people or the environment, but Gildan is different. goku symbol hoodieBesides its own strict policies ensuring that employees and the environment are improved—not exploited —by Gildan's presence, Gildan submits itself to the scrutiny of two watchdog organizations: Worldwide Responsible Apparel Production (WRAP) and the Fair Labor Association (FLA). kurdistan hoodies
And here is the best part: Neither you nor Earth Sun Moon are paying more for Gildan shirts than we would with a competitor. Gildan consistently provides us with comfortable, durable garments at a very competitive price. I hope you enjoy wearing our unique apparel as much as we enjoyed creating it! bubble hoodies calgaryThanks for shopping with us, and thanks for taking the time to get to know us better. funny rowing hoodiesI hope you'll be back again soon.abercrombie and fitch laura hoodieIn most cases, formerly dangerous is code for sellout. While the artists on this list may not all have totally reneged on their creative integrity, what they all have in common are careers that (1) started amidst controversy, legal troubles, and/or rumors and reports of literally dangerous (to fans and musicians alike) living, on and off stage, and (2) careers that have slowed to a drip in light of adult responsibilities and ultimatums from loved ones and physicians alike.
For better or worse, the debauched antics and controversial posturing that endeared many of these artists to millions of their fans were financially and physically unsustainable. Not surprisingly, the majority of bands and frontmen profiled here play(ed) punk rock or heavy metal music; many are considered pioneers in their respective genres, but all have become more symbolic figureheads or bobble-headed caricatures of hard rock culture. Many still record and perform, but none of these artists still instill fear in the hearts of overprotective parents or anxiety in concertgoers seated in the pit, pre-mosh. Of course, an unincarcerated, boring rockstar is better than a dead or otherwise silenced one; hence, value judgments aside, here are 10 Bands That Used To Be Dangerous. John “Ozzy” Osbourne was better known through most of the 70’s and 80’s as the Prince of Darkness and godfather of heavy metal. Not only are Ozzy and his bandmates in Black Sabbath credited with creating the genre out of Led Zeppelin’s mysticism, the Beatles’ rock & roll roots, and punk rock’s shift to overdriven guitars and dark lyrical content, the Brit-born vocalist also set the precedent for the no-holds-barred lifestyle of excess and self-abuse that is forever associated with metal music.
As a reality TV personality however, Ozzy is a walking anti-drug ad; shaky and addled from a life of excess. The punk ethos around commercial success is often contradictory, with some of the mind that getting a countercultural song on the radio is a sonic f– you to the mainstream, and realizing bills must be paid, selves fed, families supported, kids raised, all with money. Others call heresy when bands profit off of their art or make a business around releasing underground music. Madness were self-described amphetamine abusers despite being a ska punk band with nerdy trumpets and trombones blaring alongside toothy guitars and off-beat drums, but lost much clout as nonconformists after appearing in and lending their music to a 1980 Honda commercial. Aerosmith are one of the few bands that even got remotely close to emulating the stripped down, slightly-subversive white blues rock aesthetic and lifestyle that made the Rolling Stones legends on and off stage. For some reason, lead singers gaining sobriety seems statistically to coincide with their selling out their band’s brand by lending their tunes, talents, or their likeness to advertising candy (Skittles, in frontman and former heroin-addict and scarf enthusiast Steven Tyler’s case) recording watered-down but massively orchestrated pop rock anthems for disaster movie soundtracks (Armageddon), or judging other inconsistently talented people on reality TV (American Idol).
Losing virtuoso bass player, Cliff Burton, to a tour bus accident would have stopped most bands in their tracks; giving them pause to debate whether the risky life of a touring musician is worth eventual super-stardom. The band carried on but coped with drinking and drugs to eventually garner the nickname, Alcoholica, drummer and lead guitarist later copping to coke addictions. In 1995, Metallica found themselves defending their foray into hard blues-rock to metalhead purists, but fans were doubly shocked when the band sued select users of Napster, becoming more of a danger to their waning fan base if anybody. Soldiers in the KISS Army a.k.a. fans of the band are much less likely than either the Insane Clown Posse’s posse or Satanic black metal fans to actually commit crimes at concerts; even if all three acts wear the same leather, spikes, and so-called “corpsepaint” makeup. Between literally putting their own blood into the printing press that ran off copies of KISS comics, and guest voicing their comic book characters in a spooky animated Scooby Doo movie, this band may have seemed dangerous to parents when they first came on the scene, but quickly revealed the shock-value to be pure marketing strategy.
John Lydon fronted Sex Pistols, the band that essentially introduced the world to the first wave of British punk rock. This band was essentially a boy band but whose outfits consisted of bondage gear and safety pins, clown-meets-Native American hairstyles, heroin addiction and behavioral problems. Being revealed as a caricature in later interviews was not surprising if disappointing. Lydon brought anarchy to the UK but his peers clung tighter to their integrity until they disbanded or OD’d, whichever came first. The “Johnny Rotten” facade crumbled as he aged, but the nail in his countercultural coffin was his appearance in a Country Life butter commercial. If Ozzy Osbourne is the Prince of Darkness to metalheads, then Marilyn Manson, the Antichrist Superstar, is the second coming. As with the founder of heavy metal, some of the controversy surrounding their music came from overblown rumors about onstage antics ending with dead bats, in Ozzy’s case, or dead puppies, in Manson’s.
Rumors aside, Marilyn’s resume does boast years of verifiable drug abuse, legal troubles over lewd conduct, self-mutilation and violence against band mates. These days the shock rocker is more likely to make headlines for selling his original artwork or signature brand absinthe, or for being charged with civil rather than criminal offenses. Billie Joe landed himself on this list with a very un-“punk” retraction and apology for an alcohol(ism) induced rant or meltdown (depending on your view of how rowdy even pop-punk artists are expected to act) at 2012’s iHeartRadio festival. While nobody should ever encourage addiction, it is debatable whether, post-social media, Green Day’s typically feisty, twitchy, aggro frontman would have been told to enter rehab for cursing seated audience members, mooning them, and hurling insults at festival organizers and the pop acts on the bill. This band went from wearing dresses and starting fights and bonfires during shows, to apologizing to corporate concert sponsors and Justin Bieber.
To be clear, it is a good thing that Marshall Mathers a.k.a. rap god Eminem is no longer a danger to himself or others. It is just a statement of fact that Mathers has had to eschew prescription pills, constant legal troubles around 1st amendment rights or criminal charges, and a high profile, volatile love life, for sobriety and stability as breadwinner and positive role model to his daughters. This evolution from new king of controversy to recovered addict and responsible father to three is mirrored in the rapper’s album titles, from the self-involved Eminem Show and Encore through Relapse and Recovery. Only in 2006 at the Rock Am Ring festival did this originally-hardcore punk band from Orange County finally play the less popular, more aggressive tracks from their runaway hit album Smash. Leading up to and during their first tour for this record, The Offspring’s shows, as with the rest of the late-80’s So Cal punk outfits, quickly gained a reputation for getting rowdy to the point of violence.